Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Gillibrand's tobacco past includes Philip Morris

Congresswoman worked for industry leader as private attorney

By JAMES M. ODATO, Capitol bureau
First published in print: Thursday, October 16, 2008 ALBANY — You won't learn about it by reading campaign literature or looking at her official biography, but Congresswoman Kirsten E. Gillibrand represented tobacco giant Philip Morris for five years as it battled criminal probes and civil lawsuits.







Today, the company and its executives continue to count her as a friend, donating at least $23,200 to her current campaign, public records show.

Gillibrand says she is independent and not influenced by money from the Altria Group, Philip Morris's parent company.

In fact, the Columbia County Democrat, now seeking re-election, has voted in favor of all three bills pushed by anti-tobacco lobbyists and passed by the House of Representatives.

Yet, in Congress Gillibrand remains one of the bigger recipients of Altria funds.

"I didn't know one way or the other that the company had contributed," she said. "We have 10,000 contributors right now. I don't know all of them."

In contrast, her neighbor, Congressman Michael McNulty, D-Green Island, received just one $500 check from the company during his 20-year career. He sent the money back.

"I didn't want to take money from a tobacco company,'' McNulty said.

Gillibrand said her work as a tobacco industry lawyer was all above board. It focused on assembly of information sought by federal investigators looking into claims that Philip Morris was involved in crimes against consumers, she said.

Anti-smoking activists, who count her as a supporter, were unaware she had once represented Philip Morris. "I did not know that," said Bill Corr, executive director of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. "What's important to us is how she votes."

Corr said his organization urges elected officials to refuse campaign funds from cigarette companies.

Gillibrand's history with Philip Morris was publicized on the Internet Wednesday on a blog written by Christopher Chichester, a former press aide to Gov. George Pataki, a Republican. The first-term congresswoman's opponent this year is Sandy Treadwell, Pataki's secretary of state and a former state GOP chairman.

Gillibrand represented Philip Morris during its defense of civil lawsuits and FBI criminal probes from 1995 to 1999, a time when the company was besieged by legal challenges mounted by states, individual smokers and the Department of Justice.

The congresswoman was unmarried and was Kirsten Rutnik at the time. Her father, Douglas Rutnik, has been a lobbyist for Philip Morris and now Altria in Albany. He received $75,000 from the company for his work in 2006, records show.

Gillibrand's tobacco work consumed most of her time at the Davis, Polk & Wardwell law firm in New York City, which billed Philip Morris $305 an hour for her. She rose to be senior associate on the Philip Morris matter, focusing on allegations of fraud and crimes, according to public records obtained by the Times Union.

Her efforts took her to a secretive lab in Germany set up by Philip Morris to do sensitive research.

An advantage to the lab, according to company documents that later became public, is that German research cannot readily be subpoenaed in the United States.

Gillibrand took notes on the research. The studies involved toxic effects of tobacco smoke. She also interviewed scientists studying cancer-causing potential in cigarettes.

She wrote several internal memos, at least one about lawyer involvement in the labs, and authored letters to Philip Morris lawyers about an FBI and federal grand jury probe into alleged nicotine spiking, according to public summaries of sealed tobacco industry legal documents. One of the confidential memos discussed how to deal with media questions.

The FBI case did not result in an indictment. The Department of Justice instead pursued a civil racketeering lawsuit that was successful, with a federal judge chastising Philip Morris for falsely denying and distorting the adverse health consequences of smoking. The ruling is on appeal.

State cases against the company concluded with a 1998 national settlement with the tobacco industry that reaped $240 billion to help defray Medicaid costs for treating people sickened by smoking.

In an interview, Gillibrand, 41, freely discussed her Philip Morris work. She characterized it as providing due process rights to a client. She said that although she does not include it in her biography, she did not hide it and has spoken to reporters about it in the past. She was a smoker for years but quit. She recommends against using tobacco products.

Gillibrand said she became an expert in attorney-client privilege while working for Philip Morris.

Anti-tobacco lawyers complain the tobacco industry hid too much of what it knew about the dangers of its products by letting lawyers manage the information.

The University of California at San Francisco has published millions of records from the tobacco settlement on the Internet. A search of Kirsten E. Rutnik calls up hundreds of titled records under seal.

"I don't think clients you represented as an associate are relevant," said Gillibrand. "I think how you vote is relevant.'' As an associate, she had no control of the cases she received.

Stanton Glantz, professor of medicine and director of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at UCSF, disagreed. "I think it's highly relevant because she was an active advocate in one of the world's biggest tobacco companies against claims that they were manipulating the nicotine delivery in cigarettes."

He said he suspects Philip Morris is investing in her for the long term. The sums they've donated, he said, are significant. "These are very important things she was doing for them," he said. "I think this is definitely newsworthy. If she had done this 10 years ago and hadn't gotten a nickle from them, then I'd say, 'well, she was just a junior member of the law firm.' But they consider her their pal."

He and Buffalo-based Roswell Park Cancer Institute researcher Michael Cummings said her past work and acceptance of tobacco dollars speak to her ethics.

"Big law firms have other clients," said Cummings. "You could work for somebody else." He said no politician should accept money from Philip Morris.

Gillibrand has raised more than $3.95 million for her 2008 run. Some of the top contributors are lawyers who worked for her two former law firms: $120,150 from Davis, Polk, and $230,631 from Boies, Schiller and Flexner.

She said she was unfamiliar with her father's work for Philip Morris, although she knows Rutnik lobbied for Altria. "I don't talk to my dad about his clients at all," she said.

Gillibrand, who makes her calendar public, met with Altria aides to discuss tobacco regulation last May. Three of the five Altria officials scheduled to attend made donations to her campaign.

Bill Phelps of Altria, said: "We support candidates who we believe are the right candidates for their constituency. Our support for candidates is based on a matrix of our legislative issues and their legislative issues. On issues we feel strongly about we make our positions known. We see her as a legislator we support."

McNulty was not perplexed when told Gillibrand accepted tobacco money.

"Maybe that's what I should have done – taken the money and continued to vote against them," he said. "She is not in the pocket of anybody. Kirsten Gillibrand is not for sale to anybody at any price."

Researchers Sarah J. Hinman and Laurie Northrup contributed to this report.

As New Lawyer, Senator Was Active in Tobacco’s Defense

Published: March 26, 2009

The Philip Morris Company did not like to talk about what went on inside its lab in Cologne, Germany, where researchers secretly conducted experiments exploring the effects of cigarette smoking.

Kirsten E. Gillibrand, in Washington on Thursday, is expected to defend her Senate seat next year.

Times Topics: Kirsten Gillibrand

John Duricka/Associated Press

Tobacco executives told Congress in 1994 that they did not believe there was a proven link between smoking and cancer. Later, the Justice Department sought to prove that they had lied

So when the Justice Department tried to get its hands on that research in 1996 to prove that tobacco industry executives had lied about the dangers of smoking, the company moved to fend off the effort with the help of a highly regarded young lawyer named Kirsten Rutnik.

Ms. Rutnik, who now goes by her married name, Gillibrand, threw herself into the work. She traveled to Germany at least twice, interviewing the lab’s top scientists, whose research showed a connection between smoking and cancer but was kept far from public view.

She helped contend with prosecution demands for evidence and monitored testimony of witnesses before a grand jury, following up with strategy memos to Philip Morris’s general counsel.

The industry beat back the federal perjury investigation, a significant legal victory at the time, but not one that Ms. Gillibrand is eager to discuss.

Now in the Senate seat formerly held by Hillary Rodham Clinton, Ms. Gillibrand plays down her work as a lawyer representing Philip Morris, saying she was a junior associate with little control over the cases she was handed and limited involvement in defending the tobacco maker.

But a review of thousands of documents and interviews with dozens of lawyers and industry experts indicate that Ms. Gillibrand was involved in some of the most sensitive matters related to the defense of the tobacco giant as it confronted pivotal legal battles beginning in the mid-1990s.

Ms. Gillibrand, who worked at the Manhattan firm of Davis Polk & Wardwell from 1991 to 2000, eventually oversaw a team of associate lawyers working on Philip Morris cases, according to a colleague, and was a frequent point of contact between the firm and Philip Morris executives.

In addition, Ms. Gillibrand represented Davis Polk on a high-level Philip Morris committee whose work included shielding certain documents from disclosure, according to several lawyers and industry observers. Serving on the panel placed her alongside some of the country’s top tobacco industry lawyers.

And she was viewed so positively by Philip Morris that by 1999, when the tobacco maker brought in an additional outside law firm to represent its interests, Ms. Gillibrand was one of five Davis Polk lawyers designated to train the firm about sensitive legal issues, according to a company memo.

When she moved in 2001 to a new firm, Boies Schiller, where she worked until 2005, one of Ms. Gillibrand’s clients was the Altria Group, Philip Morris’s parent company, where she helped with securities and antitrust matters, according to the firm.

Ms. Gillibrand, 42, a former upstate congresswoman who is still unknown to many New Yorkers and is preparing to defend her Senate seat in an election next year, is reluctant to discuss her work on behalf of the tobacco company. After initially agreeing to be interviewed by The New York Times, the senator canceled through her spokesman, Matt Canter, who said that focusing on Philip Morris would not reflect the range of her work as a lawyer, which also included representing pro bono clients, including abused women and families contending with lead paint in their homes..

Senator Gillibrand was serving as a young associate when she was assigned this case,” Mr. Canter said. “It is a small part of her 15-year legal career.”

He stressed that like other tobacco lawyers, she was not at liberty to discuss her work for Philip Morris because of attorney-client privilege.

But those who recall Ms. Gillibrand’s days as a young lawyer say she was capable and eager as she plunged into the high-stakes and lucrative world of tobacco defense work.

“The client was always in her office,” said her former Davis Polk colleague Vincent Chang, who spoke glowingly of Ms. Gillibrand. “She was probably accorded more responsibility than the average associate by far.”

Of course, many lawyers, including some who now serve in the Senate, have defended unpopular clients. Still, in an approach that was not uncommon at law firms that represented tobacco companies, lawyers at Davis Polk were permitted to decline work on the tobacco cases if they had a moral or ethical objection to the work, Mr. Chang said.

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Asked whether Ms. Gillibrand had any misgivings about representing the tobacco company, Mr. Canter responded by e-mail: “Senator Gillibrand worked for the clients that were assigned to her.”

Ms. Gillibrand was never the lead lawyer on the tobacco cases, which at Davis Polk drew on the work of dozens of lawyers and staffers. Robert B. Fiske Jr., a former Whitewater prosecutor and a Davis Polk partner, was the top lawyer among the approximately 20 at the firm working on the Philip Morris defense on the perjury case. Ms. Gillibrand’s hourly rate — $305 in 1995 — put her in the middle range of reimbursement for associates on the case, according to a tobacco industry document.

Mr. Fiske declined, through the senator’s office, to be interviewed about her work for Philip Morris, but released a statement calling Ms. Gillibrand “smart, hard-working and thoughtful.”

During her most recent congressional race, Ms. Gillibrand, who is a former smoker, accepted $18,200 in campaign donations from tobacco companies and their executives — putting her among the top dozen House Democrats for such contributions. Many Congressional Democrats do not accept tobacco money.

Mr. Canter said the senator should be assessed based on her record in Congress, where she has voted against the industry’s interests on several occasions, including supporting cigarette tax increases to help expand children’s health care.

And Todd Henderson, an assistant professor at the University of Chicago Law School, argued that it would be unfair to assess lawyers by whom they represent. “Nobody would want to live in a world in which lawyers are judged by the clients they take,” he said.

Limiting Evidence

A scion of a prominent Albany political clan, Ms Gillibrand graduated from law school at the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1991 and took a job at Davis Polk, a firm that had worked closely with the tobacco industry for decades.

Ms. Gillibrand was working at the firm during critical years for the tobacco industry, as the public tide was turning against smoking, and leading Democrats in the Clinton administration and Congress pushed for a more aggressive stance toward cigarette companies. At the same time, plaintiffs’ lawyers were beginning to chip away at the industry’s time-tested legal strategies.

In 1994, executives of the nation’s largest tobacco companies, including Philip Morris, prompted anger and disbelief when they swore before Congress that they did not believe smoking was addictive or that there was a proven link between smoking and cancer.

That appearance intensified criticism of the industry and scrutiny by federal prosecutors and ultimately led to a broad criminal investigation by the Justice Department into whether the executives had perjured themselves.

The government sought reams of internal company records to determine whether the tobacco executives had lied. There is no indication that Ms. Gillibrand ever discussed the case with William Campbell, then the Philip Morris president and chief executive, who was among the subjects of the perjury inquiry. But Philip Morris internal records show that the company’s top lawyers entrusted her with several essential elements of the case.

As a member of the Eastern District of New York Subpoena Working Group, Ms. Gillibrand helped limit what evidence the government obtained. She also monitored the testimony of witnesses who appeared before the grand jury and wrote strategy memos to the Philip Morris general counsel, Ken Handal, analyzing the witnesses’ statements and their impact on the investigation.

Her travels to Germany took her to the Institut Fur Biologische Forschung, or Institute for Biological Research, a laboratory that Philip Morris had set up in Cologne, which has been criticized by antitobacco activists and cancer doctors. The establishment of the lab overseas, where topics of study included the role of tobacco in cancerous tumors, had allowed the company to keep conducting research there, beyond the reach of the United States government, news media and plaintiffs’ lawyers.

Ms. Gillibrand learned so much about the laboratory’s inner workings during the criminal investigation that by 1997, records show, she provided Philip Morris lawyers with a list of questions about the German lab to help them prepare company witnesses being called to testify in civil cases in Minnesota and elsewhere across the country.

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At the laboratory, she interviewed Dr. Max Reininghaus, the general manager who oversaw the experiments, and reviewed lab personnel records that had been sought by federal investigators.

In 1998, when the case reached a turning point as one tobacco company, the Liggett Group, considered cooperating with prosecutors, Ms. Gillibrand was one of a handful of lawyers for Philip Morris privy to the unsuccessful efforts to dissuade Liggett from breaking ranks with the other cigarette makers.

She was also among the small group of Philip Morris lawyers involved in the effort to contain the damage the defection could do to other companies in the tobacco industry, pushing to prevent Philip Morris from disclosing any documents that would violate the confidentiality of the other co-defendants.

“She clearly was more than a lowly associate lawyer on the case,” said Anne Landman, a tobacco document researcher who has testified against the industry and edits Tobaccowiki.org, a Web site that provides analysis of tobacco documents. “Philip Morris showed deep trust in her and brought her in on sensitive legal matters that were of great importance to the company.”

In the face of the vigorous counteroffensive from the industry, the Justice Department abandoned its criminal inquiry in 1999 and decided to bring a racketeering case in civil court, claiming that the cigarette companies conspired for half a century to mislead the public about the dangers of smoking.

Ms. Gillibrand did not work on the racketeering case, on which other law firms took the lead. But when Judge Gladys Kessler of Federal District Court handed down her landmark decision in that case in 2006, finding that the tobacco companies had conspired to defraud the public, she based the ruling in part on the business practices Ms. Gillibrand had delved into during the perjury case. The judge cited Philip Morris’s use of the German lab as a way for the company to suppress evidence and scolded the company for concealing information from consumers and government regulators.

Asked last week whether Ms. Gillibrand agreed with the judge’s decision, her spokesman replied: “Senator Gillibrand did not work on that case and is not familiar with its details.”

A Rising Star

Ms. Gillibrand was also deeply involved as Philip Morris and other cigarette makers confronted another challenge: mounting accusations that the industry was abusing the attorney-client privilege to prevent disclosure of damaging research and other sensitive documents.

Legal experts and a Congressional committee said that for decades, the companies had misused the attorney-client privilege to try to conceal scientific information that was damaging to the industry. The lawyers, for example, participated in overseeing scientific research projects that they could then keep confidential. But in the 1990s, government and plaintiffs’ lawyers began directly challenging this protection.

The state of Minnesota, as part of a lawsuit seeking to force tobacco firms to pick up the state’s cost of treating smoking-related illnesses, objected to the companies’ claim of attorney-client privilege, invoking what is known as the crime-fraud exception: essentially, an assertion that the privilege did not apply because the lawyers were being used to help the companies commit fraud. A Minnesota judge agreed, saying that Philip Morris had engaged in an “egregious attempt to hide information” and, in a major blow to the industry, eventually forced the release of some 30 million pages of documents from industry files.

Philip Morris and the other companies subsequently settled the Minnesota case for $6 billion in 1998.

But with the industry facing other lawsuits around the country, Philip Morris turned to a committee it established to handle issues surrounding disclosure of other documents. In some instances, the committee sought to determine if certain documents had been improperly shielded under attorney-client privilege rule. But the committee also worked to protect other industry documents from being released, a practice that drew harsh criticism from lawyers and others who took on the industry.

Clifford Douglas, who served as a lawyer for the Congressional task force that looked into the tobacco industry’s practices, said, “The crime fraud committee was charged with preventing plaintiffs or the government from seeing sensitive documents that Philip Morris wanted to keep secret.”

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Some of the nation’s most prominent tobacco lawyers from several prestigious law firms had seats on the committee, known as the Philip Morris Crime Fraud Issues Committee. And so did Ms. Gillibrand, who was already seen as a rising star among her colleagues at Davis Polk.

Mr. Chang, who worked with her at the firm, said it was telling that Ms. Gillibrand would be assigned to the panel along with “the linchpins of the tobacco defense bar in the entire country.”

“That’s certainly an indicator of the kind of respect that she was accorded at Davis Polk that they would choose her — a relatively junior associate — to be on a panel with some of the most prominent senior tobacco lawyers in the country,” he said.

Leslie Wharton, a senior counsel at the Washington law firm of Arnold Porter L.L.P. and a member of the crime fraud committee, said that although Ms. Gillibrand had less experience and stature than other lawyers on the panel, she was assertive, deeply involved and very effective in advocating on behalf of Philip Morris.

“She did more than pull her own weight,” Ms. Wharton said. “We handled highly specialized issues on a whole variety of cases, and she was a full partner in everything we did. She worked as hard as anyone and was a very capable, smart lawyer.”

Much of the committee’s work remains sealed, but internal documents indicate that the committee had wide latitude and “should be consulted with respect to just about any privilege issue that might arise in any case.”

A Philip Morris spokesman declined to discuss the committee or when it was formed.

Helping With Strategy

At Davis Polk, lawyers not only represented Philip Morris in litigation, they advised the company on business strategy, including how to protect the image of the cigarette company and how to deal with concerns about the effects of its products. This approach reflects, in part, the longstanding closeness between the firm and tobacco makers. But it also raised concerns among critics that the lawyers had crossed a line, and were essentially becoming agents in the business operation.

There were instances, for example, when Ms. Gillibrand was called upon to help the company deal with mounting public unease about its product and practices, according to interviews and a review of industry documents. Ms. Gillibrand was also schooled in some of the chemistry of cigarettes.

In 1998, for example, Roger G. Whidden, Philip Morris’s vice president for worldwide regulatory affairs, wrote Ms. Gillibrand a letter along with a draft document containing proposed responses to possible questions from reporters about nitrosamines, a cancer-causing agent in cigarettes.

In the letter, Mr. Whidden tells Ms. Gillibrand that the draft was prepared “on the basis of conversations” with her and others at Philip Morris, and asks her to review it. The suggested answers state that Philip Morris is working to reduce the presence of the deadly agent in cigarette smoke.

But the document also makes an assertion that experts say is highly misleading. The document declares flatly that the amount of nitrosamines in cigarette smoke had been reduced through filtration. That assertion was not in keeping with what was known about limitations of certain cigarette filters at the time, the experts say: smokers frequently compensated for them by inhaling more deeply, plugging up filter ventilation holes with their fingers or lips or taking more puffs.

The tobacco companies had been aware of this flaw in the filters for decades, according to industry documents and interviews, and Ms Gillibrand had just weeks before been briefed on their shortcomings and had taken a tour of the filtration section of Philip Morris’s production plant, according to company documents.

The presentation was given by Bill Dwyer, a scientist in the company’s research and development division, who described, among other things, how plugging the ventilation holes of filters diminishes the effectiveness of the filters.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Ford NY1

Harold Ford Jr. Pushes Back Senate Run Announcement

Harold Ford Jr. has delayed his announcement of whether he will run for U.S. Senate in the wake of Governor David Paterson's ending his own election campaign.

For Ford, Gillibrand Jabs Take Flight

Harold Ford Junior scaled back the attacks Wednesday against Senators Kirsten Gillibrand and Chuck Schumer while continuing to lay the groundwork for a statewide run.

Ford, Gillibrand Trade Sharp Remarks

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and his potential Democratic Senate rival Harold Ford Jr. have escalated their war of words.

Ford Lunches With Brooklyn Democratic Party Boss

Harold Ford Jr.'s interest in running for a U.S. Senate seat for New York drew positive ratings Friday from one of the state's most influential powerbrokers, Democratic Party boss Vito Lopez.





Bloomberg

Mayor: Gillibrand Could Have Been Defeated By Ford, Zuckerman

Mayor Michael Bloomberg says New Yorkers would have been "better off" with more choices in a Senate primary.

Paterson

Paterson Criticizes Gillibrand For Lack Of Support

Governor David Paterson took a shot at the woman he appointed to the U.S. Senate on Don Imus's radio program Wednesday, in the wake of her suggesting that the governor step down over alleged scandals.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Stringer, Maloney and Mccarthy

“I think the reason we have elections is to exchange ideas on the important issues of our time,” said Mr. Stringer, a former state assemblyman who has served as borough president since 2006. “Voters have an expectation for a Senate seat held by Kennedy, Moynihan, that there will be a discussion of these issues through the electoral process.”

Carolyn Maloney

Several members of the state’s delegation in the House are considering bids, though they would have to take the risk of giving up their seats to run. Representative Carolyn B. Maloney, a Manhattan Democrat, said Wednesday that she was “seriously considering it,” adding, “Many people have called me and asked me to run.”

Carolyn McCarthy
Representative Carolyn McCarthy, a Long Island Democrat, also said she might run, citing her disagreements with Ms. Gillibrand’s views on guns. And Representative Steve Israel is said to be considering a run. Ms. Maloney and Mr. Israel were considered but passed over by the governor in the Senate selection process.

DOWNSTATE DEMOCRACY: MALONEY'S RIGHT TO RUN

THE ISSUE: Whether Rep. Maloney should challenge Sen. Gillibrand for NY's US Senate seat.

I agree that Rep. Carolyn Maloney is doing the right thing as she bravely plans to give Democrats a choice on Primary Day ("Run, Carolyn, Run," Editorial, July 3).

Sure, she is liberal and has the voting record in Congress to prove it. But this is what democracy is all about -- letting the voters go to the polls to make a choice.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, President Obama and Gov. Paterson do not have the right to make a permanent selection to represent the people of New York for the next six years.

With unemployment soaring, energy costs escalating and the state Senate in chaos, these three fellows should concentrate on doing their jobs.

We, the people, can decide.

Kevin B. Kamen

Baldwin

***

It is extremely aggravating to see how downstaters are hyping Maloney for the Senate.

I am sure she would do a fine job of representing New York City and Long Island as senator, but no one has done much representing of upstate until Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand was appointed.

We see and hear our interests trashed by those downstate as if we exist solely for their benefit.

Quit acting as if we are inconsequential.

Maloney isn't much of a representative for anyone but the local interests.

I don't vote Democrat, but at least Gillibrand will give an honest listen. Maloney is a waste of time. (NYP July 8, 2009)

MALONEY VS. BALONEY
6/4/09

It's looking increasingly like Rep. Carolyn Maloney is going to challenge Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in next year's Democratic primary, having signed two major political consultants to her fledgling campaign. Good for her.

The nine-term Manhattan congresswoman has inked veteran strategist Josh Isay and fundraiser Cindy Darrison, it was reported yesterday.

That's good news for her -- and better news for New York's Democrats.

Our differences with Maloney on issues are many and varied, but the tremendous pressure that's been exerted on potential Gillibrand opponents by Barack Obama and Chuck Schumer is truly offensive.

Indeed, squandering the prestige of the White House and New York's senior senator on ratifying Gov. Paterson's bizarre anointing of Gillibrand is insulting to members of their own party.

Maloney says a final decision on whether to run is still several weeks off, but we sure hope it's a go.

Democrats deserve a choice.

RUN, CAROLYN, RUN

Rep. Carolyn Maloney of Manhattan says she's planning a primary chal lenge to Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, the ideological chameleon from Albany.

Good for Maloney.

Yep, she's a dyed-in-the-wool liberal Democrat. And her positions on most major issues give us hives.

But she has principles, and for 16 years she has ably represented New York's so-called Silk Stocking district -- the East Side of Manhattan and parts of Queens.

Kirsten Gillibrand?

In 2006, she eked out a victory in the 20th Congressional District -- which, while it's changing, counts as many cows within its borders as liberals.

Gillibrand won by mouthing conservative views on the issues, and by taking full advantage of a scandal-plagued Republican incumbent's many weaknesses.

She cruised to re-election in 2008 -- after having presented herself as a pro-gun, anti-immigration, anti-gay-marriage, anti-bank-bailout "moderate" Democrat.

Then New York's senior senator, Chuck Schumer, and its accidental governor, David Paterson, egregiously and successfully conspired to replace Hillary Clinton with Gillibrand.

Whereupon Gilly began changing colors -- morphing from deep purple to bright blue in the blink of an eye.

Clearly, Kirsten Gillibrand isn't about to let principles stand between herself and all those downstate primary votes.

But as unseemly as her behavior may be, even worse is the disrespect for democracy that Schumer and the Democratic Party -- all the way up to the White House -- have displayed to date.

Himself the product of a bruising 1998 primary fight, Schumer has now decided that contested primaries are bad -- doubtless because he knows that his puppet will be hard-pressed to win one.

So, he got President Obama to push aside possible challengers to Gillibrand, including Long Island Rep. Steve Israel.

Maloney, happily, seems to be made of tougher stuff.

New Yorkers deserve to choose their own leaders.

WASHINGTON -- In a slap at President Obama, former President Bill Clinton will headline a fund-raiser for Rep. Carolyn Maloney, who is challenging Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in the Democratic primary for Senate.


NYP EDITORIAL: RUN, CAROLYN, RUN 9/27/09

Clinton has not endorsed anyone in the race, but his move to help Maloney soon after Obama attempted to clear the field for Gillibrand could be seen as an insult to the White House.

Clinton spokesman Matt McKenna said yesterday that Clinton -- a legendary fund-raiser -- will attend the July 20 event at The St. Regis hotel in Manhattan, even though the money raised will be used to try to unseat a White House-backed candidate.

McKenna downplayed the significance of the event, noting that Clinton did a similar event for Gillibrand in the spring.

"We agreed some time ago to attend this event as a way of saying thank you for al the hard work that Carolyn Maloney did for the [Hillary Clinton] 2008 campaign, just as we have done for candidates around the country," McKenna said.

Polls show Maloney and Gillibrand running neck-and-neck.

During the Democratic primaries last year, Bill Clinton publicly criticized Obama as untested and unready for the job of president, which Hillary Clinton was also seeking. Bill Clinton and Obama buried the ax, and the former president campaigned for the Democratic nominee.

The fund-raiser was planned to benefit Maloney's House election committee, but those funds are entirely transferrable to her Senate campaign account.

Maloney has not formally announced her bid for Gillibrand's seat, but an adviser has said for the first time this week that she's running. An announcement is expected in about two weeks.

Her decision to enter the race came in spite of the White House's attempts to smooth the way for Gillibrand 14 months before the statewide primary.

Democratic Rep. Steve Israel (LI) backed out of the race after Obama asked him to do so for the sake of party unity.

Gillibrand has already proven herself an effective fund-raiser, and Obama's support is expected to open a lot of doors for the upstate Democrat.

Marist College pollster Lee Miringoff said Maloney's ability to "kick those doors open" for herself will determine how much of a threat she poses to Gillibrand.

The most recent campaign-finance filings available showed that Gillibrand had $2.2 million in her war chest, while Maloney had $1.3 million. With Post Wire Services

Spitzer slams Paterson for picking Gillibrand for Senate

Former Gov. Eliot Spitzer came out swinging today -- slamming his successor for picking Kirsten Gillibrand to a Senate seat and calling out President Obama for meddling in the Democratic primary race.

"Her views on issues are either wrong or too malleable," Spitzer told Albany radio station WAMC, saying the seat-warming pol isn't worthy to represent New Yorkers.

Gillibrand, who was picked by Gov. Paterson to replace Hillary Rodham Clinton when she became secretary of State, may face a tough primary challenge from former Tennessee Congressman Harold Ford.

'Luv guv' Eliot Spitzer has no love for David Paterson or Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, who he called 'not somebody whom I would have appointed under any circumstances.'
AP "Luv guv" Eliot Spitzer has no love for David Paterson or Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, who he called "not somebody whom I would have appointed under any circumstances."

"We need people in leadership now who know what they believe, who are willing to stand up and state what they believe and make tough decisions on critical issues, relating to the economy, civil rights, issues of crime and punishment, guns, same-sex marriage," the scandal-plagued Spitzer said in his most heated comments since he quit in March 2008.

"I just think on every one of those scores, she fails."

The Post first reported last September that Spitzer was eyeing a return to politics after his career was derailed by dalliances with a call girl while he famously chose to keep on his black socks.

He said he was dumbfounded by Paterson's choice of the two-term upstate congresswoman. of Gillibrand: "She's not somebody whom I would have appointed under any circumstances.

Spitzer knocked President Obama for asking two of Gillibrand's potential primary challengers, Reps. Carolyn Maloney and Steve Israel, to sit the race out.

"The effort that has been ongoing to eliminate any possible opposition to her in a primary is equally wrong," he said.

"I think the White House should focus on creating jobs, getting health care reform, reforming our financial structure -- and it has in that area in particular done a very poor job -- rather than getting immersed in the local politics of New York state."

Gillibrand's spokesman, Matt Canter, said the ex-gov was going off half-cocked.

"Because of his own actions it wasn't his call to make," he said. "It's not surprising considering she was among the first Democrats to say he would need to step down if the allegations were true." (NYP 1/9/2010)

Behind the Senate race puppet show Who's pulling the strings for Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand?

Despite a brief, unremarkable career, name-recognition so low that 32% of her party doesn’t know who she is, and a widespread perception that she’s the puppet of a power-hungry senior senator, Kirsten Gillibrand — appointed junior senator from New York one year ago — is, so far, facing an uncontested primary. This, in a season filled with anti-incumbent rage and no shortage of viable, qualified contenders.

Hmm.

“I can’t recall, in all my years in politics, anything quite like this,” says Guy Molinari, former five-term congressman and Borough President of Staten Island. His daughter, fellow Republican Susan, was, for a while, considering a run. “It’s bizarre. Suddenly people are appearing from the sun or the moon, saying: ‘You can’t run!’ “
Sen. Gillibrand and her sponsor, protector, (controller?) Sen. Chuck Schumer.
Daniel Shapiro
Sen. Gillibrand and her sponsor, protector, (controller?) Sen. Chuck Schumer.

“You can say, in quotes, that I ‘don’t know’ why this is happening,” says Vito Lopez, Democratic assemblyman from Brooklyn. “Everybody who steps up, steps out. The average length of time for a candidate is two weeks. You can fill in all the dots.”

“I can’t — it’s not that I can’t, I don’t want to comment on what led Carolyn Maloney, Steve Israel, etc. not to run,” says Suffolk County Legislator Jon Cooper, himself talked out of a run just last month by DNC Treasurer Andy Tobias and the senator herself. “But they all came to the conclusion that it was not in their best interest.”

“It’s appalling,” says Jonathan Tasini, who is running against Gillibrand, but who is so low-profile he has not rated a smack-down by party power-brokers or representatives thereof. “It sends the message,” he continues, “that we don’t care about democracy, that these are insiders making deals that have nothing to do with voters’ lives.”

The main perpetrator, most agree, is Sen. Chuck Schumer, in the back room, with the knife and future careers in his hands. (He gets an assist from the White House when dealing with a particularly defiant character.) This conclusion can be reached, in part, by his behavior at a Gillibrand fundraiser last May, when he shouted, to the delight of the room, “There is not going to be a primary!”

Still, few will even utter his name off-the-record, choosing to allude or imply. Molinari, who is 81 and unencumbered by a political future, is a man alone in his freewheeling, unmitigated fury.

“I’ve known Chuck for a long time; we started in the state legislature the same day,” he says. “He is the quintessential powerbroker, one of the most powerful people in the country. The message that we’re getting is that you have to be anointed by him to run in this state. I guess he sits at the right hand of God now.”

After Hillary Clinton resigned her seat to become Secretary of State and the subsequent, rapid implosion of aspirant Caroline Kennedy, the senior Senator — irked by having to compete with Clinton’s star power, rumored to be behind Kennedy’s demise for the same — reportedly wanted someone he could mold, control, perpetually outshine.

There was the little-known Kirsten Gillibrand, a 40-year-old corporate lawyer who, like her possible challenger Harold Ford Jr., is the product of a powerful political clan. Her grandmother had been exceptionally close to Albany’s “Mayor for Life,” Erastus Corning; her father, a lobbyist for, among others, Big Tobacco, had a long relationship with then-Sen. Al D’Amato’s senior staffer Zenia Mucha.
Sen. Gillibrand and her sponsor, protector, (controller?) Sen. Chuck Schumer.
Daniel Shapiro
Sen. Gillibrand and her sponsor, protector, (controller?) Sen. Chuck Schumer.

Late to politics herself, Gillibrand won her seat in the House in 2006. She defeated the Republican incumbent of her conservative upstate district with a combination of political clout (Hillary Clinton was a prominent supporter), shrewd policy positions (a pro-gun hard-liner on illegal immigration) and, possibly, dirty pool. Gillibrand had been trailing in the polls until right before the election, when the press suddenly got hold of a sealed police report detailing a domestic disturbance at her rival’s residence. (She has never commented on any involvement.)

According to colleagues with knowledge of the governor’s shortlist, Gillibrand’s inclusion was outrageous.

“I was furious,” says one, a fellow New Yorker. “I had talked to Gov. Paterson. I had no problems with any of the names on that list, except Gillibrand.” This colleague, who regards the junior senator as “very capable,” says that Gillibrand was nonetheless ill-served by just two years in the House. “It takes years to learn all the issues,” she says. “But I think one of the reasons Chuck went for her is that he doesn’t want another superstar. Everyone who knows Chuck knows that.”

CURIOUSLY, friends, colleagues and rivals describe Gillibrand as anything but a docile, malleable creature. “She’s incredibly ruthless and ambitious,” says one upstate politician. “She would say and do whatever she had to for her personal gain.”

“We came in together, core class of ’06,” says Pennsylvania Rep. Jason Altmire. “I thought, ‘Wow, this is a really impressive person.’ She was energetic, thoughtful, smart. I relied on her advice for the farm bill — we had conversations about milk pricing, dairy farming. I remember talking to her about the Iraq war and war policy.”

What did she have to say?

“I don’t remember exactly,” he says. “It was three years ago. We took it very seriously.”

When she first got elected, she asked to meet with me,” says Long Island Rep. Peter King. “But she basically just talked about herself.”

The senator is famously verbose. Last July, an introduction of Sonia Sotomayor went on so long that fellow Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy brought down the gavel, saying, “We’re going to have to put your full statement in the record so that Justice Sotomayor can be heard.” Gillibrand asked if she could finish.

Gillibrand was raised in Albany, where she attended the exclusive Emma Willard School (Jane Fonda is among the alums). Like Ford Jr., she got into politics as a little kid, smacking bumper stickers on cars at the urging of her political family. Tina Rutnick, as she was called then, was, by all accounts, a popular, athletic, sunny kid, the middle of three, who studied hard because she knew she wasn’t the smartest. At Dartmouth, she’d spend trips to and from squash matches with books in her lap, memorizing Mandarin.
Sen. Gillibrand and her sponsor, protector, (controller?) Sen. Chuck Schumer.
Daniel Shapiro
Sen. Gillibrand and her sponsor, protector, (controller?) Sen. Chuck Schumer.

“Tina liked to argue about things she thought were right,” says her former teammate Chris Barnell. “I thought she’d be a lawyer.”

In fact, she became one, working at the NYC firm Davis Polk & Wardwell throughout the 1990s. It was here that the studious, assiduous Gillibrand — who, during this time, told her mother that she would not hire an illegal cleaning lady in case she ran for office someday — got involved with the case that would become her largest albatross.

It’s one of Gillibrand’s least favorite topics, the work she did as a defense lawyer for tobacco giant Phillip Morris in a case brought by the Justice Department, alleging that executives were dishonest about the toxic effects of tobacco. She went to Germany twice, visiting research labs that had shown such links, but whose location kept them beyond the reach of the US government. She was, according to one published report, described by co-workers as enthused by the assignment, which was not mandatory (lawyers at the firm could decline cases with which they had ethical problems).

Gillibrand pleased the client so much that when she moved over to Boies Schiller & Flexner in 2001 — the same year she married, changing her name — she brought along Phillip Morris’ parent company, the Altria Group, which also employed her father as a lobbyist. In 2008, she took $23,200 in campaign donations from Phillip Morris.

After agreeing to a 20-30 minute interview with the Post one day before, and pushing the back the interview twice, Gillibrand was less than talkative on this topic. When asked if she sticks to her last public statement — that she is not sorry for defending Phillip Morris — she says, “Ah, yes.” Does her father still work as a lobbyist for Big Tobacco? “I don’t know,” she says, adding, “I have to go.” Total length of interview: Approximately four minutes.

During this brief phone chat, Gillibrand sounded nervous; when asked about her stance on the health care bill — which will cost New York $1 billion dollars — she went down a list. “Third, it will affect 1.5 million New Yorkers who couldn’t buy group coverage. Third, it’s going to help everyone get preventive care. Second, no one will be denied because of a pre-existing condition.”

It’s a demeanor that fits with the description given by some colleagues in the House, who describe Gillibrand as clearly smart, but not good off-script and still a bit in over her head. And it does nothing to help the current perception of her as Schumer’s drone, a politico who couldn’t cut it on her own, and so happily swaps independence for the security of a Senate seat.
Sen. Gillibrand and her sponsor, protector, (controller?) Sen. Chuck Schumer.
Daniel Shapiro
Sen. Gillibrand and her sponsor, protector, (controller?) Sen. Chuck Schumer.

But that’s because so little is known of Gillibrand, and that is deliberate.

Though publicly deferential to Schumer, always and happily in his shadow, Gillibrand is also quite steely and shrewd. While Schumer may think that he’s got two guaranteed votes, Gillibrand may just be playing the good soldier. She does not have a problem asking for what she wants.

Days after she got the Senate seat — with a mere two years in the House on her political resume — she began lobbying for positions on the Senate’s most prestigious committees, with Schumer’s help. She wound up on Agriculture, Environment, and Foreign Relations.

“She’s a pretty strong-willed woman,” says her New York colleague. “She’s an independent person, and independent thinker.”

Perhaps this is true. Perhaps going along with Schumer’s votes, muddying positions to placate her district, gunning through this election so that the next and the next are easier and easier — incumbents have a 98% re-election rate — is all part of some brilliant, Machiavellian plan. Perhaps the day will come when Schumer can no longer control his protégé, when, as Darth Vader learned, the student becomes the master.

She is clearly an adept politician, having personally convinced her former rival Cooper that he should abandon his run for the good of the party.

Cooper recounts Gillibrand’s arguments, sounding, still, a bit perplexed. At first, he says, Andy Tobias approached. “He used the same arguments that Hillary supporters used against Obama: That a primary would be divisive, that it would cost money better spent on the general. Of course, I had counter-arguments.” (Namely, that Obama won — but we now know, too, that Obama was the favored nominee all along.)

Gillibrand, he says, swayed him over a three-hour, off-the-record dinner at the Capitol Grille in D.C. First, she showed him pictures of her two young sons. Then, she told him everything he’d heard about her conservative record — that she voted against an assault-weapons ban, that she is against same-sex marriage — were untruths. (She does have a 100% rating from the NRA and is now in favor of the latter, though she says, “I have been consistent on that issue since the beginning.”) Her rumored strategy against Ford, should he run, is to depict him as ideologically empty, willing to reverse or massage previous policy stances in order to win crucial downstate votes. This appears to be without irony.

“I’ve been traveling all across New York,” Gillibrand says. “I’m really connecting with voters.”

‘I SAW her a year ago at an event Mayor Bloomberg had at Gracie Mansion,” says one veteran New York pol. “I was asking her how things were going, and she gave me some make-believe comment, like, ‘What a wonderful club the Senate is.’ I couldn’t tell whether she believed it or not. But Harold — who I also saw there — he’ll say, ‘Oh, that son-of-a-bitch.’ He’s a regular guy; he knows how to talk to people. Kirsten Gillibrand can’t shut up, and she says nothing.”

Many of those who spoke with the Post think Ford will run. Those who don’t think he will, hope he will. “If Harold says, ‘Screw you all,’ will we see any of these wannabes step in?” says this pol. “Maybe.”

As for the candidate herself: Does she have any theories as to why she remains unopposed? “Any candidate who wants to run, should run,” says Gillibrand. “I welcome the challenge. (NYP MAUREEN CALLAHAN 1/17/2010)

FORD IN SENATE RACE OPENS DOOR FOR OTHERS

Harold Ford Jr.'s presence as an increasingly likely Senate primary rival against Kirsten Gillibrand is fueling speculation that other Democrats who'd been warned off running by the White House and Sen. Charles Schumer might reconsider.

"Who else runs, is my question," said one veteran political insider. "Him running opens the door to someone else getting in now."

Another said, "Ford refusing to get out makes it easier for other people to the same."

A multi-candidate field would be a massive problem for Gillibrand -- who's likely to spend the coming months having to go at it largely alone.

"Chuck needs to worry more about himself," said one Democratic strategist. "Being partisan/political/Democratic right now is not good...he has been taking heat for it, and she now needs to sink or swim by herself."

Schumer and the White House had kept a string of potential challengers -- from Rep. Steve Israel to Rep. Carolyn Maloney -- at bay from a run since last January, when half the state's congressional delegation was chomping at the bit to challenge Gillibrand, who didn't have many friends among her former House colleagues.

But now, after the Bay State disaster where Republican Scott Brown won the late Ted Kennedy's seat, the White House is politically damaged.

Schumer is not considered vulnerable, with a massive war chest and a strong political base. But Schumer, who is obsessed with his own poll numbers and who sources said was riled by the Massachusetts upset, is less likely to leave himself with without a firewall against the national tide. (NYP January 22, 2010)

Challenging Gilly

In the race to replace Gov. Paterson ap pointee Kirsten Gillibrand, New York's (uber-) junior US senator, new names seem to surface daily. The latest: former state banking superintendent Diana Taylor, who happens to be Mayor Bloomberg's girlfriend.

It's encouraging news for New York -- though hardly surprising, given Gillibrand's glaring weaknesses.

As Maggie Haberman first reported yesterday on The Post's Knickerbocker blog, DC-based Republicans approached Taylor to see if she'd be game to make the run -- and Taylor reportedly declined to rule it out.
Michael Bloomberg and Diana Taylor
AP
Michael Bloomberg and Diana Taylor

Her name is just one of many:

* Former Gov. George Pataki is also said to be considering a bid.

* Dan Senor, a member of the Bush administration, may throw his hat in.

* Lawyer Bruce Blakeman, a Port Authority commissioner, is already running.

Other names: economist David Malpass, former Rep. Joe DioGuardi, Rockland County Executive Scott Vanderhoef, Orange County Exec Ed Diana . . .

Maybe they all should take a number?

True, a bid by any Republican in heavily Democratic New York faces serious obstacles. But what all these folks realize is that Gillibrand is vulnerable.

She's seen as a cat's paw for Democrats like President Obama and Sen. Chuck Schumer -- one who has failed to represent New York's interests well in DC.

Bloomberg himself has made his huge displeasure with Gillibrand widely known -- which may be why Republicans thought to approach Taylor.

Dems, meanwhile, have sought to clear the field for Gillibrand -- nudging potential challengers like Reps. Steve Israel and Carolyn Maloney and ex-Rep. Harold Ford to stand down. But competition in that race can only benefit New York.

Gillibrand needs a challenger.

The more the merrier (NYP, March 13, 2010)

Harold Ford

  • I can assure you, voters don't know the junior senator, they can't name a single positive outcome from her, which means one simple thing: She will be labeled for the failures of Washington, the failures of Albany," - Harold Ford on Morning Joe, Mar. 2nd, 2010

  • "In Syracuse, my visit there yesterday, in the seven weeks that I paid for myself to get around the state, I was there more times than Kirsten Gillibrand had been there since she's been a U.S. senator," - Harold Ford on Morning Joe, Mar. 2nd, 2010 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rK-Nl2a8rQ4

  • If the unelected senator and tobacco industry apologist has a new strategy based on distorting Harold’s support for abortion rights and gay rights, then she’s not only a puppet of the party bosses, she’s a desperate liar,” Ford spokesman Davidson Goldin said. http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0110/31993.html

NY TIMES
January 12, 2010
interview with Harold E. Ford Jr. , by Michael Barbaro,

As it relates to the economy, you have to be far more aggressive than the senator, or the Congress, has been, around job creation. I think tax cuts for employers, particularly small businesses, is critically important right now.
As it relates to big issues: I think there ought to be a huge-tax cut bill for business people, not only in New York but across the country.
The other reality is that Kirsten was appointed to the seat. She is not the incumbent. New Yorkers have never had a chance to vote for her. She has never stood on the ballot before.
If I were the senator of the state, there is no way I could support a bill that would add the kind of burdens that have been projected to add what it does to New York City and New York State. We should not do it to any state.

Q. You raised the issue of independence. It sounds like you are saying Kirsten Gillibrand is not independent enough from leaders in Washington and Albany. Can you explain what you mean?

A. One thing is clear: If I am elected senator from New York, Harry Reid will not instruct me how to vote. He may try, and would be my leader and I would work with him.

But I would be beholden to voters in New York. And you can count, for certain, that I was sure of what I voted for before I voted for it.

I think I read some comments where at least exchanges between some elected officials in the city and Kirsten Gillibrand, she didn’t quite understand what was in the health-care bill. And if you are going to cast a vote in favor of a massive reform bill, you ought to know what is in it.

HUFFINGTON POST
SARA KUGLER | 03/ 2/10 11:00 AM, AP
Ford called Gillibrand various names, including a hypocrite, a liar, an unelected senator and a parakeet who takes positions based on whatever party leaders tell her to do.

NY TIMES – OP ED
By HAROLD FORD Jr.
Published: March 1, 2010

Democratic Party insiders started their own campaign to bully me out of the race — just as they had done with Representatives Carolyn Maloney, Steve Israel and others.

I began to understand why the party bosses felt the need to use such heavy-handed tactics: They’re nervous. New Yorkers are clamoring for change.

the party bosses who tried to intimidate me so that I wouldn’t even think about running against Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, [who had been appointed to the seat by Gov. David A. Paterson,] are the same people responsible for putting Democratic control of the Senate at risk.

too few in the Democratic Party are really willing to break with orthodoxy to meet these challenges.

I believe New Yorkers are hungry for a new direction in government.

Our elected officials have spent too much time this past year supporting a national partisan political agenda — and not enough time looking out for their own constituents.


Ford: I'm gearing up for Senate race
By HAROLD FORD JR.
NY POST
Posted: 3:09 AM, January 12, 2010


New Yorkers deserve a free election.

New Yorkers expect a politics where politicians do what's right based on independent judgment, free of political bosses trying to dictate.

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, likely rival Harold Ford escalate at-tax
DAILY NEWS BY DAVID SALTONSTALL NEWS SENIOR CORRESPONDENT
Not to be outdone, the Ford campaign followed with its tax-related broadside, saying Gillibrand needed to release all tax returns dating to her time as a "tobacco lawyer."
The reference is to a multiyear stretch in the 1990s in which Gillibrand defended tobacco giant Philip Morris against charges it had lied about the dangers of smoking.
"How much was the unelected senator paid to help big tobacco cover up the addictiveness of nicotine?" asked Ford spokeswoman Tammy Sun. "Did she file tax returns for her windfall on behalf of big tobacco?"

Politico Blog
By MANU RAJU & GLENN THRUSH | 1/26/10 4:40 AM EDT

,Harold’s support for abortion rights and gay rights, then she’s not only a puppet of the party bosses, she’s a desperate liar,” Ford spokesman Davidson Goldin said.

NY POST
2:00 PM, January 26, 2010
ι MAGGIE HABERMAN

Ford spokesman Davidson Goldin lashed back hard, saying, Ford is someone "who will focus on creating jobs for New Yorkers, so it's no surprise the unelected senator seems so afraid of losing in an actual election.
"It's interesting the unelected senator is spending her time on Twittter rather than fighting to create jobs for New Yorkers," Goldin added.

"She started her career as a tobacco apologist and after being appointed senator in a backoom deal, has spent her time kowtowing to Washington insiders," he said. "She takes positions that hurt the people of New York, whether it's raising our taxes or killing jobs. And her rock bottom approval numbers prove that New Yorkers are well aware of this. Undoubtedly she is too."

MSNBC MORNING JOE INTERVIEW MARCH 02, 2010.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rK-Nl2a8rQ4

Voters don’t know the junior senator, they cant name a single positive outcome from her which means one simple thing, she will be labeled for the failures of Washington, the failures of Albany.

"In Syracuse, my visit there yesterday, in the seven weeks that I paid for myself to get around the state, I was there more times than Kirsten Gillibrand had been there since she's been a U.S. senator," Ford continued.

There’s a lot of work for Democrats to do and even a lot more work for her to do.

Ford suggested that Gillibrand, who was appointed to the seat formerly held by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, didn't spend enough time with upstate voters and that she is out of touch with her constituency.


By Jason Horowitz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, January 15, 2010

"You can judge from the editorials in the city, and just the response in the city and in the state that people don't want party bosses telling anyone that you can't run," Ford said

"People want an independent strong voice representing New York in the Senate."

New Yorkers, he said, deserve a candidate who would fight for their interests, tax breaks and a health-care overhaul beneficial to the state, which he believes is not being done now. "Independence and jobs" were his echoing watchwords. "That's not about publicity," Ford said "That's real."

"Maybe it's the benefit of time. People have had the opportunity to experience some of the policies passed in Washington," said Ford, adding, "and there is dissatisfaction with Senator Gillibrand."

"The only person Chuck Schumer has to blame is himself and his fellow Washington insiders for having the gall to interfere with a free election," said Goldin, Ford's spokesman. "And for blocking an independent Democrat from running."

Ford Still Criticizes Gillibrand From Beyond The Race

A day after Harold Ford Jr. aborted a possible bid for Senate, he insisted on Tuesday that he could have won and expressed doubts about the Democrats' chances in November.




Chameleon on plaid: Who is Kirsten Gillibrand?

Kirsten Gillibrand, New York's junior senator, doesn't just flip-flop on is sues as convenient -- she also revises her past.

Voters, beware: Gillibrand is a chameleon on plaid, a woman who has and will do anything, say anything, forget anything, spin anything to get elected.

Her 180-degree reversals on gun control, gay marriage and immigration -- making her one of the most liberal members of the Senate -- are old news. But that's far from the only way she remakes herself, as we discuss in our new book, "2010: Take Back America."

Start with her habit of censoring her own history in campaign biographies. Before she got elected to Congress, Gillibrand had spent 14 years as a lawyer in private practice, and just one year working at the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Sen. Spin: Gillibrand fudges the history of her substantial  work for the tobacco industry and her role in fostering the mortgage  meltdown.
GREGORY MANGO
Sen. Spin: Gillibrand fudges the history of her substantial work for the tobacco industry and her role in fostering the mortgage meltdown.

Yet her first campaign biography stated: "Throughout her career, Gillibrand has demonstrated her commitment to public service." That from a woman who spent one year of her 15-year career in government work.

But it's easy to see why she wants to cover up, especially, her nine years at the New York law firm of Davis, Polk -- because her work there involved years of defending tobacco giant Philip Morris against charges of criminal perjury and fraud.

In 1994, top Philip Morris executives had sworn before Congress that they had no knowledge of the addictive or cancer-causing qualities of tobacco, even though their internal documents directly contradicted them. And it was Gillibrand's job to keep those incriminating records from federal prosecutors.

When her efforts for Philip Morris finally came to light last year, Gillibrand lied about why she did the work -- claiming that as a mere associate at the firm, she had no choice but to take the work assigned to her.

Sorry: Davis, Polk had a clear policy permitting employees to decline any case that raised personal ethical or moral issues. Gillibrand apparently had none -- but she didn't want us to know that.

Yet, while Gillibrand prefers to downplay all these connections, they remain quite useful to her: Her former law firms and Altria Group -- the new name for Philip Morris -- have been major sources of donations to her campaigns.

Excising Davis, Polk from her résumé obliged her to emphasize that year at HUD. Thus, in 2006, she proudly touted her "key role" in furthering HUD's "new market initiatives."

Oops -- these were the Clinton/Cuomo policies that required Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to vastly increase the number of loans they purchased that involved low-income borrowers. Borrowers who couldn't afford the mortgages. Borrowers who were given subprime mortgages. Borrowers who are now facing foreclosure. That's the great work Gillibrand was involved in at HUD.

But she quickly covered herself. Once the subprime crisis became a household word and banks began to fail, in large part because of these very policies, Gillibrand simply deleted that section from her biography. The "new market initiatives" went the way of Philip Morris.

Gillibrand has another reason to distance herself from policies that helped cause the mortgage mess -- namely, the fact that she profited from the meltdown. Her husband, Jonathan, seems to have greatly increased the family's wealth in 2007 by betting that the mortgage market would tank.

In that year, he bought "puts" on such subprime lenders as Countrywide, IndyMac, Downey Financial, Bank United Financial and Accredited Home Lenders -- meaning that he'd gain if they declined, as they did. He sold many of the puts that fall, largely at a profit -- since the Gillibrands reported more than $40,000 in capital gains that year.

How would those of her constituents who lost money in bank and home stocks feel about the senator's family investments?

Kirsten Gillibrand will change any position, reinvent herself, erase her past -- do anything to win election to the Senate. She plainly thinks the voters are idiots who will fall for her ridiculous stories, spins and lies. Here's hoping the voters show her who's really the idiot.

Adapted by Dick Morris and Ei leen McGann from "2010: Take Back America," released this week by HarperCollins Publishers.

Gay Rights

Here's another interesting wrinkle from Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand's (D-NY) imminent promotion to the Senate: She appears to have switched her position on gay marriage from a standard "safe" Democratic stance, to now being a full supporter.

(TPM) January 23, 2009

SEN. GILLIBRAND FLIPS ON 'DON'T ASK, DON'T TELL'

CALLS FOR HEARING ON 15-YEAR-OLD POLICY 7/27/09

WASHINGTON - Less than a year after refusing to sign onto legislation calling for the repeal of "Don't ask, don't tell," New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand has about faced to announce a hearing on getting rid of the 15-year-old policy to keep gays out of the military.

"'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' is an unfair, outdated measure that violates the civil rights of some of our bravest, most heroic men and women. By repealing this policy, we will increase America's strength - both militarily and morally," Gillibrand declared in a statement released today.

Gillibrand does not sit on the Armed Services Committee, which has jurisdiction over the issue.

When she was in the House, Gillibrand was on the committee that oversaw the matter, but she refused at that time to co-sponsor a measure that would have repealed the "Don't ask, don't tell" policy.

Not adding her support to the anti-discrimination bill, which had 146 Democratic co-sponsors and three Republican co-sponsors, was just one of the reasons that the Human Rights Campaign gave her the lowest rating in the state's Democratic delegation.

Gillibrand Spokesman Matt Canter said that changing the military policy is "something she cares deeply about," and he also said that she has always maintained the same position on the matter.

"Senator Gillibrand has always supported repeal, but felt there was zero opportunity to repeal this legislation when George Bush was in the White House. Now with a new president, a new Congress, and military leaders coming forward, Senator Gillibrand believes now is the time to repeal this unjust policy," Canter said.

Gillibrand will likely face a primary election challenge from Democratic Rep. Carolyn Maloney next year.

Gun Control

Gillibrand Flip Flops on Guns

Senator says she was misled by language in a bill she sponsored

It may be Senator Kirsten Gillibrand's clearest flip-flop so far. In an interview with news 4 New York on Friday, Gillibrand said she would not vote for a bill she sponsored just eight months ago. "Not unless they fix it," She said.

It was no secret when Gillibrand co-sponsored the bill HR 4900 just eight months ago that is was widely opposed by Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his coalition of mayors against illegal guns.

In writing, critics warned then-Rep. Gillibrand that her bill would block local law enforcement's access to trace data. (Trace data is information about a gun's history that can help solve gun crimes and identify bad gun dealers.)

Despite the objections of the mayors and others, Gillibrand never withdrew her support of the bill until now.

The Senator told News 4 New York on Friday she was misled by language in the bill that implied it would help law enforcement. Gillibrand said she was unaware when she cosponsored hr 4900 that it would actually hurt.

"If a law says it's not supposed to obstruct law enforcement it's not supposed to obstruct law enforcement," Gillibrand said.

The new senator says it was Mayor Bloomberg who convinced her of the bill's flaws in a meeting this week. (NBC, 2/13/2009)


Gillibrand Defends Gun Control Flip-Flop
Sen. Gillibrand and fellow New York Senator Chuck Schumer want to change the Tiahrt Amendment, which requires records of gun background checks be destroyed after 24 hours. The amendment restricts cities, state and members of law enforcement from using so-called "trace data" to track how guns are trafficked across state lines.

Gillibrand, a supporter of the National Rifle Association, had originally co-sponsored the bill, which was added on to a appropriations bill, as an upstate Congresswoman. April 20, 2009 (WNBC)

NYT

Perhaps the most challenging issue for Ms. Gillibrand is her record onguns. As a congresswoman, she had a 100 percent rating from the National Rifle Association, but has said since being appointed senator that she would moderate her positions.

But her Annie Oakley image — she recently told Newsday that she kept two rifles under her bed — may unsettle liberal voters who turn out for Democratic primaries.

Ms. McCarthy, who was elected after her husband was killed in a gunman’s rampage on the Long Island Rail Road in 1993, was not impressed.

“She’s turned her opinion on just about everything, but people are seeing through that,” she said. “Who is she? What does she stand for? That’s going to be her biggest problem, that she flips on everything.” Challengers to Gillibrand Emerging NYT 3/4/09


Immigration





Senator Kirsten Gillibrand: Immigration flip flop?

When appointed by Gov. Patterson to the junior Senator seat, Gillibrand was actively opposed to then Gov. Spitzer's proposal to allow illegal aliens to get driver's liscences. At the time Senator Gillibrand was a Congresswoman. This brought huge pressure from Democrats and supporters at the time.

"Ms. Gillibrand, a Democrat, opposed any sort of amnesty for illegal immigrants, supported deputizing local law enforcement officers to enforce federal immigration laws, spoke out against Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s proposal to allow illegal immigrants to have driver’s licenses and sought to make English the official language of the United States."


But a year later, with the help of lobbyist/consultant Roberto Ramirez, Senator Gillibrand is now a favorite of the very same people that initially despised her positions on immigration. In fact Assemblyman Peter Rivera who once denounced the positions of Gillibrand as "xenophobic", now is a Gillibrand supporter.

"If anyone else did a 180-degree turnaround to the benefit of every immigrant in the United States, I don't know who they are.
...


Given the fact that Senator Gillibrand has now gained support among many immigration supporters, but what is the cost? In less than a year the multi-term politician has gone from a consistent opposition to full support.

"...Arizona’s harsh and unreasonable law seeks to criminalize undocumented immigrants and to turn local police forces into immigration enforcement agencies."

"Undocumented immigrants"? The document missing being a green card and leagal authorization to be in America. Therefore meaning that they violated Federal law and are not only criminals but fugitives. But the police are the bad guys?

The question here is not the law, nor the position on immigration policy. It is the fact that a politician has reversed years long beliefs on a significant political issue, that in the past she defended in the face of opposition from within her own Party. This is more than just a flip-flop, it is a complete ideological reversal. In less than 12 months. Just as the need for re-election and funding grew.

Voters face a question. Is a Senator who is capable of reversing multiple long-held ideological positions at the whim of their political party worthy of representing New York State? Is it possible that any voter can be sure that such a politician would not again change their position as the whims of the political party change? Would voters that might benefit from the change today have the same belief in the politician if tomorrow they again change their position when re-election is not an imminent need?

Some 40% of potential voters in New York don't know who Senator Gillibrand is or where she stands. Considering the number and nature of flip-flops she has made in the last year it is not surprising. But by November what is the chance of the real Senator Gillibrand appearing? Or what if this seemingly non-vertabrae political figure is the real thing. In either case is this the politician that New York wants and/or deserves? May 3, 2010, Examiner.com